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Page added on May 15, 2014

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The Peak Oil Crisis: Parsing 2014

General Ideas

Some 15 years ago when the current concept of peak oil was posited, it was all going to be simple. Somewhere in the early part of the 21st century oil production was going to reach a peak and start to decline. Shortages would develop and prices would spiral upwards. But we should know by now nothing is simple. Peak conventional oil actually arrived on time circa 2005 and has remained on a rough production plateau ever since. Oil prices went flying up from the $20 a barrel we saw 15 years ago to $140 before demand destruction set in, leading to crude prices settling around $100 a barrel.

High priced oil sent much of the global economy into the tank where it still struggles to eke out small gains amidst incessant hopes for a rebound. Demand for the new high priced oil products fell in the advanced countries – partially from gains in efficiency and partly because large segments of the population could no longer afford to use them in the accustomed manner.

The five-fold increase in oil prices produced other reactions. The international oil companies were soon rolling in money which led to a capital spending spree to find and extract more oil. Much of massive increase in capital expenditures, however, went to fund costly deep sea drilling as most of the remaining dry land oil fields are now firmly in the hands of the national oil companies. Sadly, the big jump in drilling expenditures in the last eight years found just enough oil to keep global production steady, but did not increase global supplies of conventional oil.
The most visible “benefit” of high oil prices was that it permitted oil companies to go after the expensive-to-exploit tight (shale) oil/gas deposits and the fracked oil “revolution” was born. U.S. production of fracked oil and natural gas soared by nearly 3 million b/d; which as it turned out was enough, when combined with the drop in demand from the US and the other OECD countries, to meet the increase in global demand for oil which has averaged roughly 1.25 million b/d each year recently.

So, for the time being, we have a balance. The OECD’s demand has been trending down: the surplus has been taken up by increases in Asian demand; lower production in several OPEC countries due to political disturbances continues; and global depletion of existing oil fields continues to drop by some 3-4 million b/d each year. The markets are balanced out by a large increase in fracked oil and an increase in unconventional hydrocarbons such as natural gas liquids and lease condensates. For several years now, this balance has worked fairly well as world oil prices have remained around $100 per barrel, but now we come to 2014.

The very cold weather not only consumed an inordinate amount of our natural gas reserves, but also slowed the drilling of new oil and gas wells in the northern states. North Dakota’s production in March was the same as in November so there was no growth in Bakken shale oil production during the four winter months. It is clear to everyone but the most optimistic that the rapid increases in US shale oil production will come to an end within the next few years and it seems likely that production increases in 2014 will be less spectacular than in recent years. Some independent analysts believe that the peak in U.S. shale oil production could come within the next 24 months. This year’s production should give some good insight into just when peak U.S. shale oil may come.

Last winter several of the major international oil companies announced that they could no longer afford the accelerated pace of capital expenditures that resulted in some $3.5 trillion being spent to explore and drill for conventional oil in the last ten years. It is this massive expenditure that has kept conventional oil production steady, but now is coming to an end. Within the next few years, we are likely to see drops in conventional production as the pace for exploring and developing new oil fields contracts.

On top of the geologic problems, the political situation in several oil producing countries seem likely to get worse before the year is out. We have already lost substantial oil production from Syria, Egypt, Yemen, South Sudan, and Iran. Iraq, where production is still growing, is sinking into anarchy. Unless a more stable political situation emerges in Baghdad soon, the fighting is almost certain to spread into the country’s oil producing provinces before much longer. Only the Iranian nuclear negotiation, the prospects for which fluctuate daily, seems to offer any hope for increased oil production from the Middle East. Even this is still a great unknown. An agreement could result in increased Iranian oil exports, while failure of the talks will likely lead to increased tensions and more sanctions, especially if Tehran resumes a quest for nuclear weapons.

There are a lot of factors currently in play that could have a major impact on oil markets. The rate of global depletion from existing oil fields is increasing as production shifts to more fast-depleting deepwater and shale oil wells. The weather forecasters say El Niño is returning this summer which means higher global temperatures and more oil and gas consumption for cooling. The Ukrainian situation is far from settled and has the potential to disrupt global oil and gas flows. One such disruption would be an increasing share of Russian oil and gas production going to China at the expense of the EU. China is engaged in mini oil wars with Japan and Vietnam over offshore drilling rights. Governments are slowly becoming more concerned about air pollution/climate change and are starting to take concrete steps to slow fossil fuel burning.
It is too early to call 2014 a pivotal year, but by December we may have a much better appreciation on what the future has in store.

FCNP



14 Comments on "The Peak Oil Crisis: Parsing 2014"

  1. Pops on Thu, 15th May 2014 7:29 am 

    Tom Whipple is about the best reporter of PO news out there.

  2. meld on Thu, 15th May 2014 7:31 am 

    seems like economies are collapsing in sync with energy declines. The slow collpase is in effect and has been for a while and will continue for hundreds of years. Nobody will notice a thing. Our great grandchildren will wake up in a world that seems totally normal to them and laugh at fairy tales of men moving around in steel boxes.

  3. Davy, Hermann, MO on Thu, 15th May 2014 7:46 am 

    I agree Pops, I read his every post!

  4. GregT on Thu, 15th May 2014 9:38 am 

    A very good summary. Will 2014 be the pivotal year? Or 2015? 2016? One thing seems certain, the decline is coming, much sooner than later.

  5. rockman on Thu, 15th May 2014 10:00 am 

    Meld – I get your point but when you say “energy declines” I assume you don’t mean Volumetrically. The world is collectively producing as much or more energy today then ever before. But the cost is also much greater and that has to be a prime driver in the economic problems IMHO. That’s why I’ve argued for a long time that the exact PO timing wasn’t as important as the price/supply dynamics as we go forward. The world has not reached PO yet…the current oil rate proves that beyond a doubt. But as you point out the world is not fairing very well for a variety of reasons.

    Which brings me back to the concept some folks still find distasteful: the POD…Peak Oil Dynamic. The world’s economy and its relationship with energy is obviously much more complicated then some date on a calendar. Yes…the POD is all encompassing and very broad. And so is life. Trying to simplify either to some date makes no sense IMHO.

  6. J-Gav on Thu, 15th May 2014 10:41 am 

    Pops and Davy – I read Whipple too and generally appreciate his take but he has on occasion served as cheerleader for stuff like nuclear fusion, which is slightly OTT in my view.

  7. Plantagenet on Thu, 15th May 2014 10:55 am 

    The concept of peak oil is no different now than it has ever been Because the earth system is so large, we got lost in the weeds of rising prices, demand drops, and politics. But the inexorable reality of oil depletion continues apace.

  8. noobtube on Thu, 15th May 2014 12:05 pm 

    Now, how exactly, is these people’s oil the property of Americans?

    “We have already lost substantial oil production from Syria, Egypt, Yemen, South Sudan, and Iran. Iraq, where production is still growing, is sinking into anarchy. Unless a more stable political situation emerges in Baghdad soon, the fighting is almost certain to spread into the country’s oil producing provinces before much longer.”

    Americans are pompous, arrogant, scumbags… example #49402934

  9. Plantagenet on Thu, 15th May 2014 12:07 pm 

    What country do you live in, noob?

  10. Northwest Resident on Thu, 15th May 2014 12:43 pm 

    The Noobster strikes again!

    A slow flying cargo plan full of shit, animosity, misplaced rage, false accusations and pin-headed extremism, The Noobster guns the throttles and swoops low before opening the bomb bays to release his toxic and putrid load on unsuspecting and undeserving conversationalists below. Then just as rapidly, The Noobster disappears over the horizon, flying back to wherever the fuck he came from to reload for his next bombing run.

  11. Davy, Hermann, MO on Thu, 15th May 2014 2:08 pm 

    I like that N/R, In my minds eye the Noobster is an ugly vole like creature that comes out of the ground with slimy drool and putrid smell then returns to his dark subterranean tunnel having soiled the place with slime and smell.

  12. Ezrydermike on Thu, 15th May 2014 2:16 pm 

    Davy, that sounds like a politician in an election year

  13. Davy, Hermann, MO on Thu, 15th May 2014 2:37 pm 

    EZ, now that you mention it YEAP!

  14. Jimmy on Thu, 15th May 2014 7:03 pm 

    Tom Whipple is a shill for Rossi and his cold fusion scam.

    His peak oil articles are bland.

    He’s here to point out the painfully obvious and build the Rossi BS hype.

    If he’s such a smart CIA analyst how come his peak oil articles are just a rehash of data available from other sources? How come he shills for Rossi?

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